Contactless Smart Cards, RFID, Payment, Transit and Security

E-passports spread to half the globe

Tuesday, February 28, 2012


Nearly half of all United Nations (U.N.) member states are now issuing biometric e-passports, according to the newest data from the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), the U.N. agency that oversees international air travel.

ICAO, which held its 20th TAG/MRTD meeting in September, reports that 93 out of 193 U.N. member states now issue e-passports, with 21 additional countries ready to deploy the technology in the next 12 to 48 months.


E-passport deployments

Country Start
Date
Annual
Issuance
Issued
to Date
PKD
use
Reading
ePassports
Albania Jun-09 450,000 900,000    
Algeria 2010 500,000 500,000    
Andorra Sep-06 4,000 19,000    
Argentina 2010 2,000,000 1,500,000    
Australia Oct-05 1,800,000 10,800,000 Yes Yes
Austria Jun-06 500,000 2,500,000 Yes  
Bahamas Dec-07 52,000 200,000    
Belgium Nov-04 500,000 3,500,000    
Bosnia Herzegovina Oct-09 300,000 600,000    
Botswana Mar-10 100,000 120,000    
Brazil Jan-10 1,500,000 2,200,000    
Brunei Feb-07 21,000 80,000    
Bulgaria Mar-10 500,000 750,000    
Cambodia Nov-08 220,000 600,000    
Canada (limited) Jan-09 3,500,000 50,000 Yes Yes
Chile Dec-09 300,000 480,000    
Congo Dem. Rep. Apr-09 250,000 400,000    
Cote d’Ivoire Jul-08 200,000 600,000    
Croatia Jul-09 200,000 400,000    
Cyprus Dec-10 32,000 16,000    
Czech Rep. Sep-06 800,000 2,700,000 Yes  
Denmark Aug-06 750,000 3,750,000    
Dominican Rep. May-04 480,000 3,360,000    
Estonia May-07 50,000 200,000    
Finland Aug-06 400,000 2,000,000 Pending  
France Apr-06 3,500,000 18,000,000 Yes  
Gabon Jan-09 n/a n/a    
Georgia Jun-10 35,000 35,000    
Germany Nov-05 3,000,000 15,500,000 Yes Yes
Ghana 2010 240,000 240,000    
Greece Aug-06 1,000,000 4,000,000    
Hong Kong Feb-07 500,000 1,500,000 Yes  
Hungary Aug-06 800,000 3,500,000 Yes  
Iceland May-06 45,000 200,000    
India Jun-08 12,000,000 20,000,000 Yes  
Indonesia 2010 2,500,000 2,500,000   Yes
Iran Jul-07 1,000,000 1,500,000    
Ireland Oct-06 600,000 2,800,000 Pending  
Italy Oct-06 2,500,000 11,200,000    
Japan Mar-06 4,200,000 20,000,000 Yes Yes
Kazakhstan Jan-09 65,000 130,000 Yes  
Korea (South) Mar-08 4,000,000 10,000,000 Yes  
Kosovo 2010 300,000 200,000    
Latvia Nov-07 300,000 1,000,000 Yes  
Liberia 2011 14,000 4,000    
Libya 2009 20,000 30,000    
Liechtenstein Oct-06 6,700 30,000    
Lithuania Aug-06 230,000 1,100,000 Pending  
Luxembourg Aug-06 25,000 110,000 Pending  
Macao Sep-09 180,000 150,000 Yes  
Macedonia Apr-07 180,000 1,100,000    
Madagascar 2010 80,000 80,000    
Malaysia Mar-10 1,300,000 1,500,000    
Maldives Jul-07 30,000 100,000    
Malta Oct-08 16,000 40,000    
Monaco Jul-05 3,000 18,000    
Montenegro May-08 20,000 70,000    
Morocco 2010 200,000 150,000 Yes  
Mozambique 2011 200,000 20,000    
Netherlands Aug-06 1,800,000 10,000,000 Yes  
New Zealand Nov-05 720,000 2,600,000 Yes Yes
Nigeria Aug-07 1,100,000 5,000,000 Yes  
Norway Oct-05 600,000 3,600,000 Yes  
Philippines Aug-08 5,000,000 12,000,000    
Poland Aug-06 1,500,000 7,500,000    
Portugal Jul-06 400,000 2,000,000 Pending Yes
Qatar Apr-08 15,000 45,000    
Romania Jan-09 1,000,000 2,000,000    
Russia Sep-06 2,200,000 7,500,000 Pending  
San Marino Oct-06 2,000 10,000    
Senegal Dec-07 620,000 1,300,000    
Serbia Jul-08 440,000 1,300,000    
Singapore Apr-06 600,000 3,000,000 Yes Yes
Slovakia Jan-08 750,000 1,500,000 Yes  
Slovenia Aug-06 51,000 250,000    
Soloman Islands 2009 n/a n/a    
Somalia Jan-07 n/a n/a    
Spain Aug-06 2,000,000 10,000,000 Pending  
Sudan May-09 100,000 200,000    
Sweden Oct-05 825,000 5,100,000 Pending  
Switzerland Sep-06 750,000 3,500,000 Yes  
Taiwan Dec-08 1,500,000 4,000,000    
Tajilkistan (limited) Feb-10 40,000 50,000    
Thailand May-05 860,000 5,200,000    
Togo Aug-09 30,000 50,000    
Turkey Jun-10 1,430,000 1,500,000    
Turkmenistan Jul-08 80,000 200,000    
United Arab Emirates 2010 300,000 400,000 Yes  
United Kingdom Mar-06 5,000,000 27,000,000 Yes Yes
USA Aug-06 13,000,000 72,000,000 Yes Yes
Vatican City Jun-08 0 2,000    
Venezuela Jul-07 420,000 1,200,000    

Source: ICAO

ICAO estimates that as of July 2011, these 93 states have issued more than 345 million e-passports, of which almost 340 million are in circulation.

As per ICAO specifications, each of these documents contains a contactless integrated circuit chip that stores biometric data–i.e. facial, fingerprint or iris–of the passport holder as well as other encrypted identification data. Forty-five of the e-passport issuing states store both fingerprint and facial data on their documents, while 34 store only the facial data. The remaining 14 states currently use facial data, but will begin including fingerprints by the end of 2011.

According to ICAO’s findings, the U.S. remains the largest issuer with 72 million documents issued to date. The U.S. issued 13 million in the past year. The UK, which issued 5 million e-passports in 2011, ranks as the second largest issuer with 27 million in total.

By region, Europe leads the pack with multiple countries–notably France, Spain, Italy, the Netherlands and Germany–each issuing more than a million e-passports in the past year.

However, according to Acuity Market Intelligence, Europe will soon be challenged by the Asia Pacific region, which is projected to issue 55 million documents in 2014 alone, representing 42% of the global share. Altogether, Acuity projects that there will be 26 Asia Pacific nations issuing e-passports by 2014.

Japan and India are leading the Asia Pacific region each with 20 million e-passports issued to date. According to ICAO, India rolled out 12 million documents in the past year, compared to Japan’s 4 million. The two are followed by the Philippines with 12 million issued to date, followed by Australia with nearly 11 million.

Many states in Africa, Central America and South America have yet to commit to the new technology, although several major countries including Mexico and South Africa are among the 21 nations listed by ICAO as “pending” for e-passport deployments.

The other nations planning to issue e-passports in the near future include Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Belarus, Cameroon, China, Colombia, Israel, Jamaica, Kenya, Kuwait, Lebanon, Oman, Panama, Saudi Arabia, Sri Lanka, Ukraine, Uzbekistan and Vietnam.

Issuance strong but usage lags

Despite the growing numbers, ICAO reports that less than a third of e-passport issuing nations participate in the organization’s Public Key Directory (PKD)–a system ICAO says is “key” in maintaining global interoperability of e-passports.

The PKD system acts as a central broker to manage the exchange of Public Key Infrastructure certificates and PKI certificate revocation lists. ICAO says the PKD plays a critical role in minimizing the volume of certificate lists that must be exchanged and is essential to keeping the exchange of these crucial lists accurate and timely.

Even fewer states use Automated Border Crossing systems, which require the traveler to pass through e-gates that verify the biometric information stored on the passport. ICAO reports that 15 nations now use the systems–of which six employ facial scans, six check fingerprints and the remaining three use both facial and fingerprint scans.

According to ICAO, just eight states read e-passports at airports and borders. These include the U.S., the U.K., Singapore, Portugal, New Zealand, Japan, Indonesia and Germany.

Report: 90% of passports chip-enabled by 2016

IMS Research predicts that within five years 90% of passport holders will be using e-passports with integrated smart card IC chips.

Nearly half of all current passports issued today use smart chip technology, thanks to a rapid migration started in 2007. “This trend is set to continue,” states Alex Green, author of the IMS report “Electronic Government and Health Care ID Cards.”

“There are still a few countries around the world that are not yet issuing e-passports. However, most have started and with the typical five to ten year replacement rates for passports, it is only a matter of time before all passports in circulation are e-passports,” explains Green.

The report examines the use of biometrics in e-passports, which is still largely limited to a digital image of the holders face stored on the IC.

Green says this will change: “By 2014, the situation is forecast to have been reversed. By this time the majority of passports being issued will also include additional biometric data such as one or more fingerprints, iris scans, etc.”


 [end] 

AOptix Technologies announced that SITA, a specialist in air transport communications and information technology, has joined the AOptix Value Added Reseller program.

Under the partnership, SITA, who has customers in more than 200 countries which includes 300 airport locations, would be able to offer its customers AOptix solutions. These offerings include the InSight iris and face recognition product as an automated solution for airports to quickly and securely identify passengers at security checkpoints with documents such as biometric-enabled passports.

read more »

Two UK airports have stopped using iris cameras and the other two are slated to stop after the upcoming Summer Olympics, reports The Telegraph. Birmingham and Manchester airports already removed the cameras, where they have been since 2005, but they will remain at Gatwick and Heathrow for the duration of the Olympics.

read more »

Neurotechnology announced that it has developed three versions of embedded solutions for Android-powered devices such as smart phones and tablets.

Specifically, Neurotechnology has ported its VeriFinger Embedded software development kit (SDK), which authenticates user identities via fingerprints, VeriLook Embedded SDK, which authenticates user identities via facial recognition, and MegaMatcher Embedded SDK, which authenticates user identities via both fingerprints and facial recognition. A version that utilizes iris recognition also is in the works.

read more »

In an effort to streamline passenger security, Jakarta, Indonesia’s Soekarno-Hatta Airport has opened the country’s first biometric immigration gate.

Fingerprint biometric identification provider BIO-key International, Inc. and Oakwell Engineering Limited partnered to create the new gate, designed for use by passengers with electronic passports. Passengers submit their e-passports and authenticate with a fingerprint.

read more »

Be first to comment...
Comment on this article

Your full name and URL will be displayed with your comment.

Your email is not shown or shared, and is used only for your Gravatar image.




characters left.
Subscribe to the Contactless News Library
Gain access to the largest collection of Auto-ID analysis on the Internet.